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Sunday, October 29, 2023

Day 10 (continued): Ciego Montero

Ciego Montero


The smooth terraplén screams to be walked on. One huge guardarraya between walls of cane, broken only by brightly colored wooden houses and their simple yards. Garlic grows in this region as well, and dozens of houses are overrun by battalions of the brown tufts.   

In Ciego, the mule stops at the edge of town, near a park that had the air, by its clean statue of Jose Marti and well-trimmed bushes, of being an important part of town.  My handler walks with me half a block to a wooden house with a sign flat on the wall next to the door announcing it as La Casona, a private home that served as the town art gallery and community center. 

Fotografía de Julio Larramendi

I have always associated the town with the spring which produced the most popular bottled water and soft drinks on the island, the Ciego Montero brand.  And this is the only reason why most Cubans would ever know about this small town which geographically is tied at the hip with the adjacent town of Arriete.  Arriete-Ciengo Montero has approximately four and a half thousand residents.  Ten of them welcome me to the town. 

Day 10 (continued): Santa Isabel de las Lajas

Santa Isabel de las Lajas


The settlement of Santa Isabel de las Lajas dates to 1800 but it was officially founded in 1824.  Esteban settled in the town after the war and took part in the 1912 black revolt protesting the exclusion of blacks from national political culture. He lived in Lajas at the same time as Coronel Simeon Armenteros and other members of the Partido Independiente de Color, the national party leading the revolts.  Most of the violence of the uprising took place in eastern Cuba, around Santiago, but a few bands of Independentistas stirred the pot in the Province of Santa Clara; one band attacked the northern region around Sagua la Grande and the other, led by Armenteros attacked the communication infrastructure of Cienfuegos between May and July 1912.  Estaban was in this group. The uprising was quickly crushed. Esteban survived to tell the tale.[1]


If there was ever a man who loved what he did and where he did it, it is the director of the Benny Moré museum in Lajas.  

Day 10: Cruces-Lajas-Ciego Montero

Cruces—Lajas—Ciego Montero

 

Electricity came first to Santa Clara. Right into the city. The philanthropist Marta Abreu brought it. It didn’t come to the Ariosa until…well, I don’t remember, but it was after the Caracas mill. Caracas brought in electric light in that area of Lajas. In the biggest mill in Cuba. The owners were millionaires, and that was why they bought the electricity. Their name was Terry. I don’t know where I was, up in a tree or on top of a roof. But I saw the lights of the Caracas mill, which were a marvel. 

--Esteban Montejo

 

It must have been the water. I boil with internal heat even before I toss my mattress on the floor hoping to find the coolest spot in the big room. My efforts are to no avail. The fever sucks up the feeble breeze of the fan like a black hole sucks up light. The absurd dreams begin as soon as I close my eyes. 

And then there were the shits. 

I stagger in a stupor to the bathroom five or six times, wobbling between the theatre seats each time, and each time leaving behind more body weight than the time before. This continues until thereias nothing left inside of me. 

After the third or fourth visit to the bathroom, I stop cursing the darkness and am glad that I can’t see what I leave behind. I perform the laborious flushing duties the first couple of times, but by the third and fourth forays, I abandon my waste to fester in the darkness. I know I will return. 

Day 9 (continued): Reality Check in Cruces

Reality Check in Cruces

The room is warm. Real warm. Sweating while sitting perfectly still warm. The window leading to the side street is sealed shut for some unfathomable reason.  Without the fan, the room would be impossible. Looking for the bathroom, I explore the building.

Behind the theatre stage are the restrooms. Or I should say, is the restroom. Unisex. Uni-able. One bathroom with three stalls, none of which flush, or have lids on the toilets or doors on the stalls to enclose them. And there is no light in the bathroom.  So, using it requires, first, that your eyes become accustomed to the seamless darkness. If you manage locate one of the three stalls, guess the location of the bowl, and aim properly, you might not add to the novel life forms nurtured by the green-yellow swamp surrounding the base of the bowl. If you felt the socially conscious urge to flush, there is a bucket on the floor by the entrance which needs to be dumped into the toilet. The last person to use it did not bother to fill it, the tap being some distance away in another room.

Day 9 (continued): Mal Tiempo-Cruces

 Mal Tiempo-Cruces

After touring the plaza with Maipu and Aniel, we enter the motel. Cookies and a cold drink wait for us. Elias, the manager welcomes us.  After I summarize the project, he offers to give me a tour.  

“We have nine large rooms with the capacity for forty-five people.  It’s not the Hilton but we receive people year-round. Groups of tourists, but mostly school trips or national organizations.” He points to the work area at the end of one wing. “As you can see, we’re renovating.” 

He tells me how back in the day, when the Baños de Bija were functioning, the motel would be full of guests. 

“A little bus would stop right out front and take visitors to the baths and bring them back later. A bus from Cruces stopped here too on the way to los Baños.”  

Outside, we say goodbye to Aniel.  The promotora probably wished that she could join him, but she silently resigned herself to her fate, accompanying me to the Mal Tiempo sugar mill through the shrub.   

We work our way around a fence to the south of the monument and head towards the smokestack sprouting in the distance. It is hot as hell by now.  Waves of heat rise from the sandy flatland, making the palms in the distance undulate, like some tropical Van Gogh creation. Maipu wraps a long sleeve shirt around her head in a makeshift turban and we weave through the scrub brush. The terrain reminds me of the high mesas in the Southwestern part of the United States. I half expect to see a sagebrush blowing past us, had there been any wind.

Saturday, October 14, 2023

Day 9: Walking to Mal Tiempo

 Mal Tiempo

 Mal Tiempo was necessary to give courage to the Cubans and to give strength to the revolution. Anyone who fought there left convinced he could face the enemy….Maceo was certain of victory. He was tougher than a hardwood tree. 

--Esteban Montejo

Night falls softly in this area of the flatlands.  Buses emptying workers into the dusty streets, tilting with the weight of the passengers pouring out the same side. Men stand on the sidewalks or leaning against walls rehashing the day’s news. Walkers hurry somewhere important.  This corner is the crossroads of the town.  Men sit on the wall of the Casa de Cultura facing the street or stand facing those who are, telling stories, gesturing wildly, well into the night.  It was the town crier corner.  I sit on the porch and watch the town breathe.  

Around eight I get ready for bed.  I decide against sleeping on the sofa and lay out my mat, lining up the two available fans to deliver what passes for coolness all over my body.  As I’m getting my toiletries in order, I see a large, muscular man open the gate from the street and walk towards the open front door.  

“Aquí no hay nadie,” I say. There’s nobody around.  

“I know,” he says. “I’m the night watchman,” El sereno

They are the only words he says to me all night. He makes the rounds in silence, which in the case of the one room building means looking around, checking the back door, inspecting from afar the few furnishings, opening the second door facing the street at the other end of the front porch and taking the keys from their hanging place above the phone.  He takes a chair from around the folding table and places it outside, under the roof at the corner of the property, facing the crossroads and the crier’s corner. He sits and looked out into the street, saying not another word to me. 

            I sleep on the floor as well as could be expected. Sometime near dawn, a loud snoring wakes me up. The sereno asleep on the sofa. I am glad that I had left it for him.

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Day 8 (cont.): Potrerillo side trip

 
Walking to  la Casa de Tejas


Back at the The Potrerillo promotora tells me about the activities awaiting me.  No dancing girls. No comedy routine.  A lunch with her family and a shower at her house whenever I was ready.  In the afternoon, she recommends a walk up the road to a house, in ruins but worth the visit, where Antonio Maceo and the other Mambí generals met to strategize the assault on Mal Tiempo.  

“It’s called La Casa de las Tejas. (the House of Roof Tiles) It is only a kilometer or so down the road. Raul will take you.”  


Later in the afternoon, after a delicious and ample lunch and a shower in a bathroom with first-world water pressure and blue tiles on the walls, I walk with Raul to Las Casas de las Tejas. He assures me it is a two-kilometer walk. Most people are not good judges of distance.  Long distance walkers have an advantage in estimating distances, usually conceived as a linear concept, because we have the combination of space (multidimensional) and time to work with.    Hills speed up time and diminish the space that we cover.  On flat land we can air it out, shrinking time and expanding space.  In the final analysis, our pace is our fate and we play games in our head trying to predict the future.  

But mere mortals are more prone to error when calculating distances. So, when Raul said that the Casa de Tejas sat no more than two kilometers away, I cut him some slack and thought the distance might be a bit more; say three kilometers.  Still, I can only blame myself for wearing flipflops on what turned out to be an eleven-kilometer round trip to the ruins. Had he mentioned that the house was near Lomitas, I would have prepared differently. Lomitas is a town south of Potrerillo where the Maceo’s entourage stopped on its way to Mal Tiempo.  The initial route through Manicaragua and Barajagua would have passed through Lomita and entered Potrerillo from the south. It did not dawn on me that the Casa de Tejas was that stop. Was it worth the walk? The house is in ruins. Its significance is not evident. No architectural badge of honor on the wall identifying this as a historic place.  No tribute to the Mambí warriors.  But, yes, it is worth the walk.  La Casa de Tejas was the center of the universe for Maceo, Gomez, Esteban and the other men thinking of Mal Tiempo as perhaps the last place where they would breathe Cuban air.  These walls in ruins at one-time protected rebel forces as the leaders planned their strategy. 


“Nearby,” says my guide as we stand in the ruins of La Casas de Las Tejas, “is Los Mangos, where they camped before the assault. Want me to take you?” 

“How near?” I ask. 

“Oh,” he thinks it over. “Maybe a couple of kilometers.” 

“No thanks,” I say. “I don’t have the shoes for it.” 

Walking back to town, out of the blue, he asks, “Do you read the bible?”  

In all my decades traveling Cuba this is the first time that anyone has posed this question. 

I pause before answering. 

“I’ve read the bible. But something tells me that probably not like you have read the bible,” I smile. 

“I’m a Christian,” he says, using the broad evangelical terminology for what is really a very specific form of Christianity. “We have a group of us that regularly get together to read the bible and discuss it.  We’re part of the Hermanos en Cristo church. Our pastor travels frequently to the U.S. to talk and to meet people, gather resources. I’d say we have over two thousand groups in Cuba; throughout the island. We’re growing.”


 

As soon as he identifies himself as a “Christian,” I anticipated some sort of contact with U.S. evangelical imperialism.  Too strong a word? Perhaps. But the Evangelicals see in Cuba and other countries in Latin America fertile ground to expand their charismatic beliefs.  In Cuba, I’ve seen evangelical churches from Baracoa to Bayamo, from the Bay of Nipes to El Cobre, and their numbers are growing. 

Back in town, I resume my daily quest to discover a geographic location associated with a decent cell phone signal.  

My escort to the Casa de Tejas suggests a visit to a house that has “the best connection in town.”  

“The family has a son in the States. He has them wired with technology that increases the signal,” he says. “I’m sure that they will let you use the connection to call your wife.”

On a side street a few blocks away from the CC stands a yellow and white 1955 Dodge Coronet Lancer hardtop all pimped out and gleaming like a jewel in the dusty street.  This car in Havana would make the driver a favorite of European tourists and a fortune if seen by a U.S. collector.  I whistle when I see it. Raul smiles. 

“They have a son in the States.” As if to say, this is the inevitable consequence of having a son in the States. 


We call out, knock on the door and when no one answers, Raul calls a woman’s name.  Around the side she came, drying her hands.  She looked to be in her late 40s or early 50s but age is hard to judge in Cuba. The hardships of maintaining a household and dealing with the general dysfunctional elements of daily life wear down women and men, but not equally. Women get the short end of the stick. Here there is no simple second shift as suffered by women in the States with housework after a long day at the office. Women in Cuba are always on the clock. Scavenging for hours to find the store with the chicken in stock, the eggs, the protein, cooking it when they bring it back home, making sure that the house is fit to live in in a dusty, windows-wide-open world. Then there are the people that inhabit this world that is so difficult to maintain. The husband, the kids. Hell, anyone getting by with two shifts trying to survive in this economy is considered lucky. Men aren’t in that great shape either. 

“Hola Raquel. Aquí tenemos un amigo que necesita una conexión buena para comunicarse con su familia en los Estados Unidos.” A friend needs a good connection to the States, he explains. 

“Entren. Sientense. Quieren café?” Come in, she says, want some coffee?

The house inside is as pimped out as the car. A 62-inch Samsung TV stands on an entertainment center a couple of meters across from a plush leather sofa.  Pictures of the kids, those portrait face shots that strive to give an angelic look to the little devils, and glass ornaments of animals decorate the top of wooden living room furniture.  High on the side wall next to the TV set is signal enhancer of some sort. Raul points it out. Whatever it is, I catch five bars on my phone for the first time since leaving Havana. I excuse myself to talk to Fabiana as the rest of the household members, a young woman and one old enough to be Raquel’s mother, carry on with their activities in the kitchen, undisturbed by the gringo speaking English in the living room.


My mother’s condition has worsened, and the end could come any day, Fabiana tells me. The precariousness of her situation weighs heavy on me. It has already influenced my decision to cut directly to Potrerillo rather than face the uncertainty of Manicaragua and Barajagua.  Now I realize I need talk to Lazaro about changing my ticket to return to Miami as soon as possible after arriving in Havana.  

I had planned a few days of decompression in Havana.  Entering the normal routines of life after a couple of weeks on the trail is a little like reentering the earth’s atmosphere after spending time in the International Space Station.  I wanted to regain my bearings, normalize the social although this walk had been atypical in its sociability.  But given my mother’s condition, I need to change the departure date to ASAP after arrival in Havana. 

  When done, I look for Raquel to say goodbye and find her in a small room on the side of the house doing laundry. Always working, these Cubans.